Sept. 4. 1852.] 



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235 



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SOME ACCOUNT of DOMES- 

 TIC ARCHITECTURE in ENGLAND, 

 from tlie Conquest to tlie end of tlie Tliirteentli 

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 isting Remains from Original Drawings. By 

 T. HUDSON TURNER. 



" "VVliat Horace Walpole attempted.andwhat 

 Sir Cliarles Lock Eastlake has done for oil- 

 pttinting— elucidated its liistory and traced its 

 progress in England by means of the records 

 of exiwnses and mandates of the successive 

 Sovereigns of the realm— Mr. Hudson Turner 

 has now achieved for Domestic Architecture in 

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 centuries." — drcldlccl. 



" The writer of the present volume ranks 

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" The book of which the title is given above 

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" Mr. Turner exhibits much learnmg and 

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" The work is well illustrated throughout 

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"It is as a text-book on the social comforts 

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8vo., price 12s, 



A MANUAL OF ECCLESI- 

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 the Twelfth Century inclusive. By the Rev. 

 E. S. FOULKES. M.A., Fellow and Tutor of 

 Jesus College, Oxford. 



The main plan of the work has been bor- 

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 and Spanheim, Mosheim and Fleury, Gieseler 

 and Diillinger, and others, who have been used 

 too often to be specified, unless when reference 

 to them appeared desirable for the benefit of 

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 The one object that I have had before me has 

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impartial view of the whole state of the case 



Pr^ace. 



" An eijitomist of Church History has a task 

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 dence that its ' truth is great, and will pre- 

 vail.' 



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 and uncertainties,' which, to use his own 

 words, are to be found in Church history."— 

 From the Scottinh i.'cclesiastical Journal, May, 

 1852. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford ; and 

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3 vols. 8V0. price 2?. 8s. 



A GLOSSARY OF TERMS 

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" In the Preparation of this the Fifth Edi- 

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" The Text has been considerably aug- 

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 hundred. 



"Several additional Foreign examples are 

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" In the present Edition, considerably more 

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JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford ; and 

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YMPATHIES of the CONTI- 



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„ NENT, or PROPOSALS for a NEW 

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 as legends, and, in general, so much of them 

 only as is necessary to explain why particular 

 emblems were used with a particular Saint, or 

 why Churches in a given locality are named 

 after this or that Saint." — Preface. 



" The latter part of the book, on the early 

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 The work is an important contribution to 

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